The Ranger's Club. NPS employee housing in Yosemite Valley.
Ranger housing in Yosemite
July 2013
Prevention 52 fire helmet
Take Action
1.    If you are a seasonal employee, ask your supervisors if the smoke detectors have been recently checked.
2.    Supervisors: DO NOT allow your seasonal employees to live in buildings that do not have adequate smoke detection.  Check the smoke detectors yourself, then check them again periodically throughout the year to be sure nobody has tampered with them.
3.    People who sleep in a building with which they are unfamiliar may have trouble getting out in an emergency.  It is essential that supervisors run fire exit drills at the beginning of the season.  Make them unannounced and conduct them at different times of day.
4.    New employee, new location? Make sure they know what number to call in case of emergency.
 
NPS Fire Facts

On the evening of April 6, 2008, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area had a near miss when one of their concessions dormitories caught fire.  For a breakdown of the incident and the story of the heroic efforts by park firefighters to save a trapped concessions employee, view this short PowerPoint presentation. 

 


Resources
The Structural Fire Program has developed many resources to help you provide an effective fire prevention program in your park.

 

Visit our website at:
  

Regional Structural Fire Staff:
 
Alaska - Alan Wetzel
Intermountain - Todd Neitzel
Midwest - Kip Schwabe
National Capital - Don Boucher
National Capital Fire Prevention Specialist - Raul Castillo
Northeast - Joe Mazzeo
Northeast Fire Prevention Specialist - Donna Baumgaertner
Pacific West - Curtis Troutt
Southeast - Jim King

For more fire prevention resources go to:
  

Submit ideas and feedback:
 
Seasonal Housing 
Author: Brian "The Prevention Guy" Johnson
Structural Fire Prevention Program Manager
 

One of the National Park Service's more famous seasonal employees wrote about Big Bend in his book One Life at a Time, Please.

 

Half the pleasure of a visit to Big Bend National Park, as in certain other affairs, lies in the advance upon the object of our desire. Coming toward the park from the village of Lajitas deep in west Texas, we see this rampart of volcanic cliffs rising a mile above the surrounding desert. Like a castled fortification of Wagnerian gods, the Chisos Mountains stand alone in the morning haze, isolated and formidable, unconnected with other mountains, remote from any major range. Crowned with a forest of juniper, pi�on pine, oak, madrone, and other trees the Chisos rise like an island of greenery and life in the midst of the barren, sun-blasted, apparently lifeless, stone-bleak ocean of the Chihuahuan Desert. An emerald isle in a red sea.

 

Know the author?  Keep reading to find out.

 

Where do you get to spend your summer?  Seasonal employment with the National Park Service is a great way to hone skills, seek adventure, and earn some money during the summer.  But this publication is not about adventure, it's about protecting our employees, visitors, partners and resources from structural fire.  So what does Prevention 52 have to do with seasonal employees?

 

Many seasonal employees live in dormitories or other group housing situations.  Typically, these housing units have been unoccupied since last season.  Across the Service conditions assessments have shown that   too many buildings have inadequate or no smoke detection devices. This is especially critical in buildings where people sleep. First and foremost, all parks should ensure that no employee lives or works in a building not equipped with smoke detection.  Other things to consider for your seasonal employees:

  • Seasonal employees are likely unfamiliar with evacuation procedures for the workplace and living accommodations.  At a minimum, supervisors should ensure they run fire drills at the beginning of each and every season.
  • Seasonal employees are not likely to have had fire extinguisher training.  Ensure each employee is allotted the time to go to DOI Learn and take the NPS fire extinguisher class.

Quiz Answer

 

Author Edward Abbey wrote about his experiences as a seasonal park ranger in southeastern Utah in the book Desert Solitaire, published in 1968. He wrote the quote above as well.

 

Author Nevada Barr has written 17 fictional novels that take place in national parks. She worked as a ranger in many of these park locales.

 

 

Just for You 
  
Seasonal Employees

Sign up and take our fire extinguisher class on DOI Learn. Search for NPS Annual Fire Extinguisher Education 

 

Permanent Employees 

Make sure that your housing has working smoke detectors, that emergency numbers are posted on your phone, and that all of your family knows the emergency evacuation plan (even children).

 

Park Structural Fire Coordinators

  1. Have you had a Fire Protection Condition Assessment (FPCA) at your park?  If not, use the links on the left to contact your regional structural fire manager to find out how your park can complete the assessment.  FPCAs show that over 10% of buildings where people sleep in the national parks do not have smoke detection installed.  Does that statistic include your park?
  2. Ensure that facility and housing managers are aware of the potential dangers associated with dryers and that all laundry facilities are properly maintained. If your park has concession housing, share it with their housing manager also! Vent systems, in particular, need to be cleaned at least annually, and should be inspected regularly. Fire protection systems should be installed and maintained annually.  

 

Superintendents

Superintendents are required to assure that working smoke detectors be in all park buildings where people sleep.  Take action if they are missing or inadequate.  Place work orders and funding requests for the long term, but have smoke detectors installed immediately.  NO NPS EMPLOYEE, CONCESSIONS EMPLOYEE, PARTNER, OR VISITOR should ever sleep in a building without smoke detection.

 

Regional/National Leadership

We have the data. We know the national parks have way too many employees, visitors, and partners sleeping in buildings that do not have adequate smoke detection.  Regional directors, housing managers, and commercial services managers: work within your parks and organizations to ensure that not one person sleeps in an NPS operated building without smoke detection.

 

  

Prevention 52 begins with you!

Prevention 52 intends to educate and empower all NPS employees to help prevent structural fires.

Prevention 52 provides you with relevant fire prevention messages every week of the year - 52 to be exact.

You have the opportunity every week to make a difference. Don't let historic ashes become your legacy.

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